[0001] The present invention relates to a radar arrangement of the type comprising a transmitter
which essentially continuously transmits a modulated carrier wave signal and a receiver
for receiving the carrier wave signal reflected at an object (echo signal).
[0002] Radar can be considered as a device for measuring and communication. In a traditional
pulsed radar, the radar sends out a pulse and measures the time for the echo from
the reflecting object to reach the radar receiver. Echoes from different objects can
have different appearances - for example, moving objects give a Doppler shift of frequency
- and by analyzing the echoes, certain information about the reflecting object can
be obtained. If the echo analysis can be said to constitute the measuring function
of the radar, then the transmission of the pulse itself to the reflecting object and
the transmission of the echo response back to the radar can be said to constitute
the communication part of the radar.
[0003] In a way corresponding to radio communication, the radar's communication function
is sensitive to interference and limited in range by wave propagation characteristics
such as atmospheric attenuation, curvature of the earth and so forth.
[0004] The communication characteristics of the radar are particularly significant in military
applications. Countermeasures which can prevent radar functioning are constantly being
developed and the communication characteristics of the radar are critical with regard
to how vulnerable the radar is to different countermeasure systems.
[0005] The radar can be disturbed actively or passively. In active interference, power is
generated within the frequency range of the radar and is transmitted towards the radar
which thereby experiences false echoes - often of such an amplitude and persistence
that the receiver function is completely blanked out within certain parts of the radar
coverage area. Passive interference involves creating decoys, for example by creating
"clouds" of reflecting strips. The echoes from the strips can be so great that echoes
from aeroplanes and boats do not stand out within the strip area.
[0006] In both passive and active interference, the party producing the interference thereby
exposes its presence and its need for protective activity. It is frequently an important
part of strategy to expose as little as possible of one's activities to the enemy.
This means using neither radar nor countermeasures against radar until this is tactically
justified.
[0007] To spot radar, signal interception devices are used. These are found in many versions,
from simple warning receivers to highly advanced interception equipment with advanced
analyzing functions.
[0008] Most of the signal interception equipment is designed for detecting radar pulses
by a wide-band method which provides poor receiver sensitivity compared with a radar
receiver. However, the radar loses more signal power due to the fact that the signal
must go out and back to reach the radar receiver but only go one way to reach the
signal interception equipment. This relation has the result that the signal interception
equipment can detect the radar at a longer range than the radar can seen the actual
target.
[0009] What has been said applies to traditional pulsed radars where the peak pulse power
is much greater than the average power of the radar. The signal interception equipment
is designed to sense the peak power, while the radar receiver senses the average power.
[0010] It is already known to use continuous wave (CW) radar. This has special characteristics,
for example as warning radar for fast moving targets. If the radar transmits on one
frequency, there must be a Doppler shift in the frequency of the echo signal for the
received signal to be detected. This radar therefore does not provide any possibility
for determining distance to the target. Other ideas for the CW radar have also been
found. Most of the attempts with CW radar, however, have not led to any success, which
is why radar signal interception equipment is frequently not equipped to spot su<.h
a radar. Moreover, for a CW radar it holds true that the peak power = average power,
which has the result that the signal interception equipment with its poor sensitivity
can have a shorter range than the corresponding own range of the CW radar. That is
to say that the radar can operate without being spotted. The radar is "quiet".
[0011] This is a very interesting characteristic of the radar since it must be known that
there is a radar, the direction in which it is located and on what frequencies it
transmits in order to be able to define a disturbance of the radar.
[0012] It is already known to be able to obtain range information from CW radar, for example
by coupling together two or more radars to obtain a calculated point for the echo
by interception technique. Another way to obtain range information by means of
one radar is to use so-called frequency modulated continuous wave (FMCW) radar where
the frequency of the transmitted carrier wave is changed (increased) continuously
with time. An example of this type of radar is the PILOT radar developed by Philips.
Like conventional CW radar, the FMCW radar is difficult to spot and is "silent". However,
the risk that this type of radar can also be disturbed is increased as a result of
more sophisticated countermeasures. Besides, the frequency modulation of the FMCW
radar can provide an error in range determination upon detection of moving targets.
[0013] There is another type of radar on the market which should be mentioned in this connection,
namely the so-called travelling wave tube (TWT) radar. Unlike a traditional pulsed
radar, where the radar transmitter comprises a magnetron tube which transmits short
pulses of the order of magnitude of 0.05-5 µs with high power, a travelling wave tube
is utilized in TWT radar. Such a tube cannot provide peak powers of the same magnitude
as a magnetron, which is why the pulse durations need to be increased in order to
obtain corresponding avarage powers. The advantage with TWT radar is that it can
provide good MTI characteristics. The disadvantage is the poor range resolution compared
with conventional pulsed radar.
[0014] To increase the range resolution in TWT radar, it is already known to vary the frequency
or phase in the transmitted pulse. This can be done by analog or digital means and
provides a certain pulse compression which increases the range resolution of the radar.
[0015] The TWT radar is also a pulsed radar which can be easily spotted by signal interception
equipment.
[0016] The object of the present invention is to produce a new type of radar which is difficult
to spot by signal interception equipment and difficult to analyze and, moreover, difficult
to disturb, with a design which provides good radar performance for MTI, range accuracy
and so forth.
[0017] A further object of the invention is to produce a radar in which the expensive high-power
technology at the transmitter end has been reduced but which, nevertheless, has increased
functionality compared with traditional radar.
[0018] The feature which may chiefly be considered to be new and characteristic of the invention
is found in the characterizing part of Claim 1.
[0019] By way of introduction, it emerges that the invention is in principle a CW radar,
which transmits and receives information at the same time and continuously in time,
in contrast to a traditional pulse radar.
[0020] To obtain a good resistance to interference and reliability, coding of information
is used in information transmission which provides redundancy both in time and frequency
to produce a robust communication system.
[0021] - According to the invention, the radar transmits long coded messages in contrast
to traditional radar which transmit one bit in order of magnitude,
- the range resolution of the radar is determined by the code frequency of the message,
- the coded message of the radar is divided up into blocks, the RF frequency being
changed between blocks,
- the code frequency is considerably higher than the corresponding block frequency
and the RF signal can be coded by means of frequency coding, phase coding, amplitude
coding or a combination of several coding methods,
- the radar sends out a code block at a frequency which is different from the frequency
or frequencies received by the radar,
- the radar stores the transmitted code message and correlates the incoming echo response
with the stored message. When code correspondence (synchronism) is obtained, this
corresponds to a definitive position of the echo response reflector,
- by changing frequency between the blocks, different range zones can be treated in
different ways, that is to say different "types of radar" can be dedicated to different
range zones.
[0022] An embodiment of the invention is shown diagrammatically in the attached drawings,
in which Figure 1 shows the basic construction of the transmitter, Figure 2 shows
an example of how frequency generation and modulation are created in the transmitter,
Figure 3 shows an example of how the code-generating signal can look and Figure 4
shows in a block diagram form the basic construction of the receiver.
[0023] The transmitter comprises a carrier wave generator 1 of the type which continuously
transmits a carrier wave signal, the signal is supplied to a modulator 2 for modulation
with a code-generating signal whose fundamental frequency, the code frequency, is
determining for the range resolution of the radar. The transmitter also comprises
a power amplifier 3 for the modulated carrier wave signal, circulator 4 and transmitter
antenna 5.
[0024] Figure 2 shows in slightly more detail an example of how the frequency generation
and modulation can be produced. The transmitter arrangement consists of a stable oscillator
6 whose oscillator signal is supplied to a frequency generator 7 whose output has
a switch 8 for coupling-in of one or more phase-locked oscillators 9. The phase-locked
frequency signal is supplied to a frequency multiplier 10. To obtain a suitable transmitting
frequency, mixing takes place at 11 with an intermediate frequency generated in an
intermediate-frequency oscillator 12. The transmitting frequency or transmitting frequencies
generated are supplied to a code modulator 13 for code modulation with a code-generating
signal 14. Alternatively, code modulation can be carried out at the intermediate frequency
level, which is indicated in the figure by the code modulator 13′. The code-modulated
carrier frequency signal is thereafter supplied in a manner known per se to the circulator
and transmitting antenna of the transmitter.
[0025] As mentioned above, the circuit for frequency generation and modulation described
above constitutes only one example. Several alternative embodiments can occur within
the context of the invention.
[0026] The code-generating signal 14 is of such a nature that one bit in the code has a
duration which is several times longer than the time of the period of the carrier
wave signal and that a code with several bits forms a block, a block being characterized
by modulation of a carrier wave with constant frequency.
[0027] The carrier wave frequency is furthermore changed between blocks so that the transmitter
transmits one block with a carrier wave frequency which is different from the carrier
wave frequency or frequencies which the receiver is set up to receive.
[0028] The block length can be made considerably shorter than the corresponding range of
the radar, which means that the radar transmitter frequently changes frequency in
the time it takes to obtain an echo response from the range limit, which increases
robustness with respect to detection and interference.
[0029] The coding is produced by either phase modulation, frequency modulation, amplitude
modulation or a combination of these methods. For example, the coding of the carrier
frequency signal can be done by means of biphase coding as binary code, in which one
of the two phases is allocated to each bit.
[0030] Alternatively, the carrier frequency signal can be coded by means of frequency coding
as binary code, in which one frequency of the two is allocated to each bit, or in
which the power is such that the result can be considered as two amplitude-modulated
codes each with its own frequency, in which the amplitude modulation is complementary
so that, when the radar is transmitting one bit at one frequency, it is not transmitting
on the second frequency.
[0031] The coding of the carrier frequency can utilize more phase positions or more frequencies
than in the case of the binary code and thus, above all, less errors are contributed
to the correlation result in the receiver due to longer codes.
[0032] Figure 3 shows an example of the appearance of a code-generating signal 14, in this
case a biphase coding with a 180° phase shift (a) and a frequency coding (b). The
code-generating signal can be generated in a manner known per se by known code sequences
being stored or generated randomly or generated by means of given algorithms.
[0033] Figure 4 shows an example of the construction of the receiver. An echo from the transmitted
modulated carrier wave signal is received by an antenna 15. Any interference signals
are also received by the antenna. Via a circulator 16, the received signal reaches
the receiver circuit itself which comprises a receiver protection 17 in the form of
a limiter and possibly a filter which admits the intended receiver signal frequency
band but blocks the signal frequency of the transmitter, among others.
[0034] If necessary, a so-called canceller 18 can be introduced in the receiver chain. This
can provide extra protection against incoming transmitter power in the receiver by
tapping off power from the transmitter channel and adjusting the phase and amplitude
of this part of the transmit signal and thereafter introducing it in opposite phase
to the part of the transmitter signal which is leaking through the circulator 16 or
is reflected after the circulator and in the vicinity of the antenna.
[0035] The canceller 18 can also be designed to suppress interference which is received
from the sidelobes of the antenna. In this arrangement a signal is derived from an
extra antenna 19 and this signal is adjusted in phase and amplitude so that the interference
coming in via the main antenna 15 is blanked out (for example suppressed).
[0036] The LO signal 19 of the radar is mixed in a mixer 20 with the receiver signal frequency
to form an intermediate frequency (IF). The signal is supplied to a filtering and
amplifying circuit 21 and thereafter mixed in mixers 22 and 23 with an IF signal 24
supplied to form a video signal. The video signal is taken out as an I channel and
a Q channel, 25 and 26, respectively, by rotating the IF signal 24 supplied by 90°
before the one mixer 23. I and Q channels are required for retaining the phase information
which, in turn, is required for synchronous detection and coherent MTI operation.
[0037] Sampling and A/D conversion in the signal processing elements 27, 28, which may be
located already at the IF level, are followed by digital signal processing. The requirement
for dynamic range in the A/D converters and later signal processing elements can be
limited by introducing controlled attenuation of the receiver signal (for example
STC) in the receiver protection 17 and/or in the intermediate-amplification section.
[0038] In the digital signal processing, the received signal can be correlated with the
code which has been stored in element 14a and is the same which the transmitter sent
out earlier and which has reached the range zone of interest to the receiver and has
now come back to the receiver. The correlator 29 can be constructed in different
lengths to match current code lengths. The correlator can also be equipped with a
correction function which uses the primary result of the correlation, and if this
value is greater than a value given before, the error contribution of this value to
the correlation results received earlier or later thereby is calculated and these
values are adjusted correspondingly which involves a successive storage of the primary
results of the correlation before the adjustments are clear and the adjusted, secondary
correlation results are used for further signal processing. An analyzer 30 assembles
the values from the different code blocks in a suitable manner on the basis of the
actual Doppler characteristics of the target and so forth.
[0039] After the analyzer 30, several different functions can be carried out in a corresponding
manner as in a traditional pulsed radar.
[0040] The digital signal processing part is connected to control electronics 31, known
per se, for power, display, communication, processes and so forth.
[0041] In Figure 4, further HF units 32, 33 have also been marked by dashed lines which
indicate the capability of the radar to receive radar echoes of more than one carrier
frequency at the same time. These HF units can be coupled together to the same signal
processing unit or switched to further signal processing units 34, 35, 36 marked by
dashed lines in the figure to indicate the capability of the radar to analyze echoes
from different range zones with different signal processing functions at the same
time.
[0042] In the radar, the range information is obtained in the following way. The code sent
out is stored in the receiver and correlated with the received signal. When synchronism
with the incoming signal is obtained, the contributions from the individual code bits
are summed together. This position in time defines the range to the object which has
reflected the corresponding coded carrier wave signal sent out from the transmitter,
see Figure 3c. The figure shows the relationship when the a first bits of the transmitted
and stored code have reached the receiver and been stepped on. With each stepping-on,
the contents in compartment 1 are multiplied by each other, the contents in compartment
2 are multiplied by each other and so forth so that a number of products is formed
in the product register. The sum of the a first compartments in the product register
is = -1 in the example above. Since the echo response is in exact synchronism with
the stored code, the sum +N is obtained instead, that is to say all multiplications
have separately become = +1.
[0043] The receiver can be constructed to receive at the same time the signal from blocks
at at least two different frequencies, and the signals are processed differently in
the receiver by division in frequency. For example, the block reflected from the near
zone of the radar can be selectively attenuated in the receiver relative to the block
which is reflected from the far zone of the radar in order to reduce in this way the
requirement for dynamic range in the signal processing unit of the receiver.
[0044] The fact that the receiver at the same time can receive the signal from blocks at
at least two different frequencies implies, at the same time, that the receiver can
dedicate certain analyzing functions to a certain range zone and partially other analyzing
functions to another range zone by selecting corresponding blocks which have been
reflected from the respective range zone and coupling them to respective analyzing
functions in the receiver. For example, one range zone can be analyzed with respect
to Doppler effects of moving targets and a second range zone can be analyzed with
respect to a good range resolution of the target.
[0045] Where the coding is carried out by means of frequency modulation of the carrier frequency,
each frequency can be separately decoded in a first step. The amplitude code obtained
in this manner is correlated with the stored code in the receiver. In this case, samples
are obtained in the compartments when, according to the code, no power will be found
as echo from an actual range. When these samples are assembled, they provide a measure
of the size of radar echoes which do not originate from the correct range and are
thus not synchronous. If the radar is exposed to an interference, the samples of this
interference can provide a measure of the actual interference power. If the code
is designed in such a way that over a given number of code bits, n, the number of
bits of one binary frequency is equal to the number of bits of the second binary frequency,
displacements of the code by one or more bits provide a small and known contribution
to the correlation.
[0046] An important characteristic of the radar is that it can dedicate different radar
functions to different range zones. Traditionally, a radar has the same function over
all of its range zone, which means that if top performance is required for one function
in one zone and a second function in a second zone, all requirements are added up
to contain at the same time all good characteristics over the entire coverage zone
of the radar.
[0047] The radar according to the present invention which transmits different blocks can
dedicate the reception of different blocks to different receiver functions. For example,
a radar can be used in an application as follows.
[0048] The near zone will have simple surveillance. In a medium zone, vehicles will be fought
with a battery and the radar will have a high resolution and good fire control characteristics
in this area. An outer zone will be especially monitored for fast low-flying aeroplanes
or missiles.
[0049] In a simple basic model, the radar can here dedicate a powerful high-resolution receiver
function without MTI to the middle zone whilst the outer zone can have low range resolution
with good MTI. By dedicating just that radar performance required for a certain task
to the actual zone, costs can be kept low and at the same time it is simpler to produce
better performance from one function if it is not required, at the same time, to force
performance from all other functions.
[0050] Where the coding is carried out by means of phase modulation, the correlator is
preferably constructed of several subunits, where the correlation results from a respective
subunit are stored for more than one position in time so that the results from the
different subunits can be assembled in different time sequences. A summation of the
results of the subunits in a certain time sequence thereby corresponds to a phase
shift of the moving target due to the Doppler effect in a corresponding speed interval.
Such a division of the correlator into several subunits provides the possibility of
detection also of moving targets which otherwise would "disappear" due to phase displacement.
1. Radar arrangement of the type comprising a transmitter which essentially continuously
transmits a modulated carrier wave signal and a receiver for receiving the carrier
wave signal reflected at an object (echo signal), characterized in that
(a) the carrier wave signal is modulated with a code-generating signal (14) whose
fundamental frequency, code frequency, is determining for the range resolution of
the radar,
(b) and where one bit in the code has a duration which is several times longer than
the time of the period of the carrier wave signal and where a code with several bits
forms a block, a block being characterized by modulation of a carrier wave with constant
frequency,
(c) and the carrier wave frequency is changed between blocks so that the transmitter
transmits one block with a carrier wave frequency which is different from the carrier
wave frequency or frequencies which the receiver is set up to receive,
(d) and where the coding is produced by either phase modulation, frequency modulation,
amplitude modulation or a combination of these methods,
(e) and a receiver which comprises elements (14a) for storing the transmitted code
and a correlator (29) which correlates the stored code with the received signal so
that, when synchronism is obtained with the incoming signal, a summing-together of
the contributions from the individual code bits is obtained and this position in time
thereby defines the range to the object which has reflected a corresponding coded
carrier wave signal transmitted from the transmitter.
2. Arrangement according to Claim 1, characterized in that the receiver is arranged
to receive at the same time the signal from blocks at least two different frequencies
and, by dividing infrequency, process the signals in different ways in the receiver.
3. Arrangement according to Claim 2, characterized in that the block which has been
reflected from the near zone of the radar is arranged to be selectively attenuated
in the receiver relative to the block which has been reflected from the far zone of
the radar to reduce the requirement for dynamic range in the signal processing unit
of the receiver.
4. Arrangement according to Claim 1, characterized in that the block length is considerably
shorter than the corresponding range of the radar, which means that the transmitter
often changes frequency in the time it takes to receive an echo response from the
range limit of the radar, which increases the robustness with respect to detection
and interference.
5. Arrangement according to Claim 2, characterized in that the receiver is arranged
to dedicate certain analyzing functions to a certain range zone and partially other
analyzing functions to another range zone by selecting corresponding blocks which
have been reflected from a respective range zone and coupling these to respective
analyzing functions in the receiver.
6. Arrangement according to Claim 5, characterized in that at least one range zone
is analyzed with respect to a Doppler effect of moving targets and at least one range
zone is analyzed with respect to good range resolution of a target.
7. Arrangement according to Claim 1, characterized in that the coding of the carrier
frequency signal is carried out by means of biphase coding as binary code where one
of the two phases is allocated to each bit.
8. Arrangement according to Claim 1, characterized in that the coding of the carrier
frequency signal is carried out by means of frequency coding as binary code where
one frequency of the two is allocated to each bit and where the power is such that
the result can be considered as two amplitude-modulated codes each with its own frequency,
where the amplitude modulation is complementary in such a manner that, when the radar
is transmitting one bit in one frequency, there is no transmission on the other
frequency.
9. Arrangement according to Claim 1, characterized in that the coding of the carrier
frequency utilizes more phase positions or more frequencies than in the binary code
case and thereby longer codes can be made, above all, to provide a lower error contribution
to the correlation result.
10. Arrangement according to Claim 1, characterized in that the receiver is constructed
of modules consisting of HF units (32, 33) of the receiver, A/D conversion and signal
processing elements (27, 28), these modules being interconnectable in more than one
way and arranged to be able to be shifted on the basis of from which range zone echoes
from the transmitted blocks reach the receiver.
11. Arrangement according to Claim 1, characterized in that the correlator (29) is
equipped with a correction function which uses the primary result of the correlation
and when this value is greater than a value given before, the error contribution of
this valve to the correlation results obtained earlier or later hereby is calculated
for corresponding adjustment of these values, which means a progressive storage of
the primary results of the correlation before the adjustments are clear and the adjusted
secondary correlation results are used for further signal processing.
12. Arrangement according to Claim 8, characterized in that the coding in a first
step is done for each frequency by itself whereby the amplitude code obtained in this
manner is correlated with the stored code (14a) so that samples which are obtained
in the compartments when no power is found according to the code as echo from an actual
range are assembled and provide a measure of the size of radar echoes which do not
originate from the correct range and are therefore not synchronous with the code so
that, if the radar is exposed to interference, these samples contain a measure of
the actual interference power.
13. Arrangement according to Claim 12, characterized in that the code is designed
in such a manner that over a given number of code bits, n, the number of bits of one
binary frequency is equal to the number of bits of the secondary binary frequency
whereby displacements of the code of one or more bits provide a small and known contribution
to the correlation.
14. Arrangement according to any of Claims 1 to 13, characterized in that the correlator
is constructed of several subunits, where the correlation results from a respective
subunit are stored for more than one position in time so that the results of the different
subunits can be assembled in different time frequencies, and a summing of the results
of the subunits in a certain time sequence corresponds to a phase displacement of
a moving target due to the Doppler effect within a corresponding speed interval.